Patrician Torlonia
Bust No. 535 of the Torlonia Collection, also called the Patrician Torlonia or the Old Man of Otricoli, is a marble bust, sometimes said to portray Marcus Porcius Cato Censorius, though also noted as being of "an unknown Roman politician". It is a copy of a Tiberian era bust, itself thought to be a copy of an original dating from around 80–70 BC. The piece is executed in the late republican portrait style later known as verism, which "emphasize the physical signs of aging... as evidence of an individual's experience, character, and virtues".
1880s identification with Galba
The Patrician was added to the Torlonia Museum as part of a gallery of busts depicting famous Romans "from Marius to the heirs of Constantine". A catalog of 1884/5 says that the portrait was discovered at Otricoli and identifies its subject as Galba; there is no corroborating evidence for the findspot, and the identification is certainly incorrect, perhaps motivated by the need for a portrait of Galba to fill a gap in the collection. The body of the bust, including the front of the neck, is a modern assemblage, possibly incorporating ancient fragments, while the head is ancient, except for repairs to the right ear and the tip of the nose.